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FTSE 100 CEO pay reaches new high

Median FTSE 100 CEO pay in 2023 reached £4.19m – the highest level on record, up from £4.1m in 2022 


Our new report shows that the pay of the CEOs of Britain’s biggest companies increased by 2.2% in 2023. 


Median pay for a FTSE 100 CEO increased from £4.1m in 2022 to £4.19m in 2022. This is the highest level of FTSE 100 CEO pay on record, although the growth in CEO pay levels are slower than in the past two years, when there was post-pandemic bounce.

Mean FTSE 100 pay grew from £4.42 million to £4.98 million – a 12.2% and over £500k increase.

Our research shows that the median FTSE 100 CEO is now paid 120 times the median UK full time worker, down from 124:1 in 2022, but still higher than 108:1 in 2021.

The ten FTSE 100 companies with the highest CEO pay were as follows:

Company  CEO  Pay (£m) 
AstraZeneca  Pascal Soriot  16.85 
RELX  Erik Engstrom  13.64 
Rolls Royce  Tufan Erginbilgic  13.61 
BAE Systems  Charles Woodburn  13.45 
GSK  Emma Walmsley  12.72 
Pearson  Andy Bird  11.27 
Diageo  Debra Crew/Ivan Menezes  10.99 
Prudential  Mark FitzPatrick/Anil Wadhwani  10.85 
HSBC  Noel Quinn  10.64 
Reckitt  Kris Licht  8.88 

Other key findings include:

  • Mean FTSE 100 pay grew from £4.42 million to £4.98 million – a 12.2% and over £500k increase
  • FTSE 100 firms spent £755m on the pay of 222 executives.
  • The number of FTSE 100 companies awarding eight-figure pay packages of over £10m more than doubled, from four firms in 2022 to nine in 2023
  • 81% of FTSE 100 companies paid their CEO a Long Term Incentive Payment (LTIP), an increase on the 74% who did in 2022. The mean LTIP payment increased from £1,791k in 2022 to £2,058k in 2023.
  • In total, twelve female CEOs served for at least part of the year, with eight of those remaining at the end of the financial year. Just six companies had female leadership for the entire financial year, with their median pay amounting to £2.69 million.
  •  For companies who had a male CEO for the whole financial year, the median pay was £4.19 million – the same as the overall median pay for the FTSE 100.

The report argues that excessive spending on top earners by leading firms makes it harder to fund pay increases for the wider UK workforce. Reforms to regulations affecting corporate pay-setting process that the Government should consider include:

  • Requirements for companies to include a minimum of two elected workforce representatives on the remuneration committees that set pay;
  • Requirements for companies to provide more detailed disclosure of pay for top earners beyond the executives, and low earners including indirectly employed workers, enabling more informed pay negotiations at individual companies and a clearer debate about pay inequality more generally;
  • Stronger trade union rights, including reasonable access to workplaces and a ban on efforts by management to manipulate votes on union recognition.